Journal of Medical Internet Research (Apr 2021)

A Peer-to-Peer Live-Streaming Intervention for Children During COVID-19 Homeschooling to Promote Physical Activity and Reduce Anxiety and Eye Strain: Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial

  • Zheng, Yingfeng,
  • Wang, Wei,
  • Zhong, Yuxin,
  • Wu, Fengchun,
  • Zhu, Zhuoting,
  • Tham, Yih-Chung,
  • Lamoureux, Ecosse,
  • Xiao, Liang,
  • Zhu, Erta,
  • Liu, Haoning,
  • Jin, Ling,
  • Liang, Linyi,
  • Luo, Lixia,
  • He, Mingguang,
  • Morgan, Ian,
  • Congdon, Nathan,
  • Liu, Yizhi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/24316
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 4
p. e24316

Abstract

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BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic has led to worldwide school closures, with millions of children confined to online learning at home. As a result, children may be susceptible to anxiety and digital eye strain, highlighting a need for population interventions. ObjectiveThe objective of our study was to investigate whether a digital behavior change intervention aimed at promoting physical activity could reduce children’s anxiety and digital eye strain while undergoing prolonged homeschooling during the COVID-19 pandemic. MethodsIn this cluster randomized controlled trial, homeschooled grade 7 students at 12 middle schools in southern China were recruited through local schools and randomly assigned by the school to receive (1:1 allocation): (1) health education information promoting exercise and ocular relaxation, and access to a digital behavior change intervention, with live streaming and peer sharing of promoted activities (intervention), or (2) health education information only (control). The primary outcome was change in self-reported anxiety score. Secondary outcomes included change in self-reported eye strain and sleep quality. ResultsOn March 16, 2020, 1009 children were evaluated, and 954 (94.5%) eligible children of consenting families were included in the intention-to-treat analysis. Children in the intervention (n=485, 6 schools) and control (n=469, 6 schools) groups were aged 13.5 (SD 0.5) years, and 52.3% (n=499) were male. The assigned interventions were completed by 896 children (intervention: n=467, 96.3%; control: n=429, 91.5%). The 2-week change in square-root–transformed self-reported anxiety scores was greater in the intervention (–0.23, 95% CI –0.27 to –0.20) vs control group (0.12, 95% CI 0.09-0.16; unadjusted difference –0.36, 95% CI –0.63 to –0.08; P=.02). There was a significant reduction in square-root–transformed eye strain in the intervention group (–0.08, 95% CI –0.10 to 0.06) compared to controls (0.07, 95% CI 0.05-0.09; difference –0.15, 95% CI –0.26 to –0.03; P=.02). Change in sleep quality was similar between the two groups. ConclusionsThis digital behavior change intervention reduced children’s anxiety and eye strain during COVID-19–associated online schooling. Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT04309097; http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04309097